Australia’s consumer sentiment slides in December on renewed angst over inflation, rates

SYDNEY, ⁠Dec 16 (Reuters) – Australia’s consumer sentiment slid in December ⁠after turning positive for the first time in four years the previous month, as ⁠households grappled with renewed angst over inflation and the interest rate outlook, a private ​survey showed on Tuesday.

A Westpac-Melbourne Institute survey showed its main ‍index of consumer sentiment fell 9% to 94.5 in December, after surging 12.8% the month before. The reading dropped back below 100, suggesting pessimists outnumbered optimists.

“Since the last news recall ​update, consumers have confronted an upside surprise on Q3 inflation figures and another strong read from the debut of the full monthly CPI for October,” said Ryan Wells, ​a Westpac economist.

Wells added that the responses over the survey week, during ⁠which the Reserve Bank of Australia held interest rates steady at ‌3.6% and warned rate cuts are now over, showed little difference between those surveyed before ⁠and after the RBA decision.

“This suggests that ​the Bank’s decision and subsequent communications did not come as a ‌significant surprise to consumers, with expectations having already been baked in prior to the announcement,” he added.

KEY ‍DETAILS

• The breakdown of the survey showed the outlook for family finances over the next year fell 6.1% to 102.4.

• The survey’s measure of the economic outlook for the next 12 months dropped 9.7%, while the outlook for the next five years slid 11.7%.

• The measure of whether it was a good time to buy a major household item fell 11.4% to ⁠98.9.

(Reporting by Stella Qiu; Editing by ‌Chris Reese and Shri ⁠Navaratnam)